‘Stop-Loss,’ an Iraq Flick That Didn’t Need Hot Guys
But Kimberly Peirce's heartfelt follow-up to Boys Don't Cry is a satisfying rabble-rouser.
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But Kimberly Peirce's heartfelt follow-up to Boys Don't Cry is a satisfying rabble-rouser.
We’ll gently prod you toward its DVD release, not as much for Owen Wilson’s endearingly pathetic turn as an ex–Army Ranger turned bully-bodyguard as for the kids.
Paul Schrader’s extraordinary, lavishly impressionistic tribute to the Japanese auteur Yukio Mishima.
Any city dweller has got to love Scorsese's insanely detailed rendering of New York’s nastiest era.
Chock-full of cantankerous ogres, goblins, and Sylphs laying siege to the Grace clan, this is a kid’s flick with serious bite.
After her days as a Hollywood glamourpuss but before moving west to become a cowgirl icon in the hit TV show The Big Valley, Brooklyn girl Barbara Stanwyck starred in 1950’s The Furies.
In 1958 Louis Malle was famous for this film, a succès du scandale that starred Jeanne Moreau as a bourgeois housewife with a wandering eye.
This campy 1968 ode to living la vida loca on the Lower East Side, new to DVD, is such a spectacularly cartoonish misfire you can't miss it.
The polar-bear fight—with the regal Iorek Byrnison, voiced by the regal Sir Ian McClellan, completely owning false king Ragnar Sturlusson—proves mind-blowing for all ages.
Jim Henson's nutty puppet party made a sublime art of the cameo, picking people who could very well have been Muppets themselves.
If, come Crystal Skull, Indy’s punches have gone soft and his damsels less distressed (if) —there will still be the original movies.
The cover looks so legit that we wonder why today's hot twentysomething stars don't record sex tapes as a kind of retirement plan.
Yes, 4/20 was earlier this week — we just forgot to tell you about this “pot-u-mentary” until now!
Things looked bad for cave-fans hoping to see the final seven episodes, but Vulture's cave-sources have exciting news!
Juno bulldozed its way to a Best Original Screenplay Oscar, but in any other year, the honor may have well gone to nominee Nancy Oliver for this tender, subtle story.
Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine’s celebratory and dazzlingly scenic documentary is Bring It On, Uganda style.
Back in January we told you to book advance passes to this Hanna Montana–Miley Cyrus movie, which went nearly as fast as the tickets to the live performances it documented. But relax: The Best of Both Worlds DVD isn’t going anywhere.
This non-blockbuster biopic spoof was the first chink in the armor of the Judd Apatow Comedy-Industrial Complex, but we urge you to see it anyhow.
We’re glad this made-to-replay movie connected with the kiddies; the thought of a new generation embracing the cheeky, squeaky crew warms our nostalgia-ridden hearts.
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